Wet environment reconstruction using IR spectra on Mars Akos Kereszturi Konkoly Astronomical Institute, MTA CSFK Mars Astrobiology Group (ESA RCL) OTKA.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
1 The Hesperian. 2 What’s important in the Late Noachian/Hesperian/Early Amazonian? Impact rate declining rapidly Volcanic resurfacing at a maximum? Hesperian.
Advertisements

AQUEOUS SEDIMENTARY DEPOSITS IN HOLDEN CRATER: LANDING SITE FOR THE MARS SCIENCE LABORATORY Rossman P. Irwin III and John A. Grant Smithsonian Institution,
Modern Exploration Global Surveyor.  Objectives:  High resolution imaging of the surface  Study the topography and gravity  Study the role of water.
Mars’ North and South Polar Hood Clouds Jennifer L. Benson Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology July 22, 2010 Copyright 2010 California.
Remaining Uncertainties: Is there evidence of a shoreline/bench in Eberswalde crater corresponding to the elevation of the delta surface and the spillway.
Martian Mineralogy: Important Minerals for Understanding Geological Processes on Mars Liz Rampe (NASA-JSC/ORAU) 9 July 2012
Remote Sensing of of Soils and Geomorphology. Soil Characteristics Soil is a mixture of inorganic mineral particles and organic matter of varying size.
1 Lab experiments on phyllosilicates and comparison with CRISM data of Mars Mario Parente, Janice L. Bishop and Javier Cuadros.
Composition and Stratigraphy of Acidic or Salty Components at Mawrth Vallis, Mars Janice L. Bishop, Briony Horgan, James J. Wray, Damien Loizeau, Christoph.
New hydrated spectral phase and stratigraphy of smectites, sulfates, and other hydrated minerals in Ius Chasma, Valles Marineris L Roach, JF Mustard, S.
PREPARATION OF ZnO NANOWIRES BY ELECTROCHEMICAL DEPOSITION
Topographic Effects The Physical Environment Organisms function within the set limits of physical laws.
Europlanet Strategic Workshop; General Assembly ESA ESTEC 26,27/02/ European data bank of spectral properties of minerals and their mixtures Maria.
ASTRONOMY 340 FALL October 2007 Class #9. Salient Martian Features  R Mars = 3396 km (R Earth = 6378 km)  Higher surface area to mass ratio 
Amanda R Hintz SUNY University at Buffalo May 29, 2009.
Evolution of Mars Burton Gray. Introduction Comparison of Current Earth, Mars, and Venus Atmospheres Physical and Atmospheric Evolution of Mars.
Stream Channels. There is some overlap of Earth and Mars surface conditions Worst of Mars Worst of Earth.
Mars Geochemistry and Future Experiment Needs Mark A. Bullock August 7, 2002.
Stream Erosion and Transport
Mars - The Red Planet Image Courtesy of NASA/JPL-Caltech.
MSL Science Team Landing Sites Discussions — Gale CraterEdgett, p. 1 Gale Crater MSL Candidate Landing Site in Context by K. Edgett April 2010.
COMPARATIVE TEMPERATURE RETRIEVALS BASED ON VIRTIS/VEX AND PMV/VENERA-15 RADIATION MEASUREMENTS OVER THE NORTHERN HEMISPHERE OF VENUS R. Haus (1), G. Arnold.
Distribution and occurrence of liquid water on Mars from the analysis of valley network structure Akos Kereszturi, PHD Collegium Budapest Eotvos Lorand.
NASA’s Exploration Plan: “Follow the Water” GEOLOGY LIFE CLIMATE Prepare for Human Exploration When Where Form Amount WATER NASA’s Strategy for Mars Exploration.
Preservation of Evidence of Ancient Environments and Life on Mars
Chapter 10 Mars. Mars’s orbit is fairly eccentric which affects amount of sunlight reaching it 10.1 Orbital Properties.
Fluvial Deposits in Margaritifer Basin Kevin K. Williams and John A. Grant Center for Earth and Planetary Studies, Smithsonian Institution Corey M. Fortezzo.
Software used: ArcMap , MatLab R2015b, Google Earth 7.1.5
Widespread surface weathering on early Mars: A case for a warmer and wetter climate John Carter, Damien Loizeau, Nicolas Mangold, Fraçois Poulet, Jean-
Mineralogy of the Martian Surface Bethany Ehlmann and Christopher Edwards.
East Melas Chasma: Insight into Valles Marineris Matt Chojnacki & Brian Hynek Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space the University of Colorado.
Spectral Evidence for Hydrated Salts in Recurring Slope Lineae on Mars Lujendra Ojha et al. Presented by John Hossain 1.
Mars Science Laboratory 1st Landing Site Workshop Pasadena, CA — 31 May – 2 June Fine-layered Meridiani crater for the MSL Landing Site L. V. Posiolova,
Carbon Sequestration on Mars Christopher Edward and Bethany Ehlmann-2015 BENJAMIN MCKEEBY.
Happy Halloween!. Homework #6 Due 6:00 pm today Exam #2 on Wednesday.
BACKGROUND MARS Research Presentation By Bradley Central Chemistry 3 rd Period Dr. Buckner.
Modern Exploration Mars Global Surveyor  “The mission will provide a global portrait of Mars as it exists today…This new view will help planetary scientists.
Conditions for the appearance of interfacial liquid water at the northern hemisphere of Mars Kereszturi A. 1,2, Appere T. 3,4 1 CSFK KTM CSI Hungary, 2.
Introduction: The Mawrth Vallis region has been identified by the Mars Express OMEGA and MRO CRISM instruments as a region with abundant hydrated phyllosilicate.
Second MPSE Workshop Warsaw, 3-5 June WROONA Group, Institute of Geological Sciences PAS, Wrocław, Poland 2 Space Research Centre PAS, Warsaw, Poland.
CHARACTERIZING THE EVOLUTION OF MARS SOUTH POLAR JETS AND FANS. By Étude Aro O’Neel-Judy Dr. Timothy Titus In association with The NASA Space Grant Program.
Mars - The Red Planet Image Courtesy of NASA/JPL-Caltech.
Week Fifteen Synopsis of Ch. 14:
Early Exploration Mariner 3 & 4
Chapter Weathering, Erosion, and Soil
Fresh Exposures of Hydrous Fe-bearing Amorphous Silicates on Mars
Remote sensing of the planets – E.T. RS
Astronomy 340 Fall October 2005 Class #9.
Impact Crater Lakes and the Astrobiological Exploration of Mars
In the past thirty five years NOAA, with help from NASA, has established a remote sensing capability on polar and geostationary platforms that has proven.
Summary In addition to the oceans, where else is water found on Earth?
Thermal Emission Imaging System Atmospheric Correction
Formation of Carbonates in Martian Meteorite ALH 84001: Cool Water Near the Surface of Mars ALH igneous age (Ieft side of gray box) and carbonate.
Can Slope-Dependent Transport Explain Martian Crater Profiles
Water on Mars Okyama University
During its two-year primary science mission, the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter will conduct eight different science investigations at Mars. The investigations.
Mars - The Red Planet Image Courtesy of NASA/JPL-Caltech.
Streams Hydrodynamics
Streams Hydrodynamics
Arizona Space Grant Consortium
States of Matter Ms. Nail’s 7th Grade Science
Stratigraphic Analysis of the Distributary Fan in Holden NE Crater
Mawrth Vallis LSWG Hab/BiosigPres, Jen Eigenbrode/ NASA GSFC
Running Water and Groundwater
Erosion and Deposition
Orbital Identification of Carbonate-Bearing Rocks on Mars
Relative Ages and Absolute Ages
During its two-year primary science mission, the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter will conduct eight different science investigations at Mars. The investigations.
Modeling ideas - erosion, sediment transport (MARSSIM, GOLEM, CHILD
Walter S. Kiefer Lunar and Planetary Institute
Presentation transcript:

Wet environment reconstruction using IR spectra on Mars Akos Kereszturi Konkoly Astronomical Institute, MTA CSFK Mars Astrobiology Group (ESA RCL) OTKA PD

Background: aim: use laboratory analysis to reconstruct wet conditions on Mars this presentation: earlier results + new project idea results: Mars surface morphology  past water (Bolyai Fund: ) project: Mars surface IR spectroscopy + laboratory analysis  past wet conditions (OTKA Fund: ) Contenst: Martian wet locations paleoenvironment reconstruction examples from morphology examples from volumetric and discharge calculations overview of wet environments IR spectra to understand wet alteration available CRISM, THEMIS data laboratory spectra, FTIR measurements

Introduction: evidences for past water on Mars channels, shorelines, Gilber-like deltas, cross-bedding features, lake basins… wet alteration products (Al-clays, hydrated sulfates, zeolites…) inside Mars meteorites (clays, carbonates) ice on and below the surface today + paleoclimate indicators  water OK, but what was it like? Temperature? pH? Salinity? …

Surface morphology  channel shape  erosion style Methods: imaging data (MOC, THEMIS, HSRC, CTX, HiRISE), topography (DTMs) GIS software, model computations, error level channel identification: images / databases (some % catalogued) measurements: cross-sectional, longitudinal profiles, network str. reason: different erosion (climate related) Kereszturi 2011 Planetary and Space Science

Surface morphology  volume, duration volume estimation: eroded (missing) regolith deposited sediment volume discharge computation (Modified Manning / Darcy- Weisbach equations) sediment transport rate active duration result: water volumes involved, wet periods (climate related) delta-like sediment Example: Gale crater NW valley eroded: 0.34 km 3 deposited: 0.23 km 3 flow speed: km/h sed. transp. rate: 0.1 kg/m 3 active duration: h fan cross profile Kereszturi 2012 Planetary and Space Science

Surface morphology  other temporal parameters relative, absolute ages crater density calculations different erosion style at different ages morphology – age correlation probably climatic forces older sections younger sections

Summary: compare different wet environment types: calculations on fluvial activity estimation on polar liquid interfacial water (today) other authors: freezing timescales of lakes, weathering durations results: separate groups with overlapping zones connections with geological evolution but great uncertainty should be improved… Kereszturi 2012 Astrobiology water ice + thin liquid film CRISM spectra

Possible solution: IR spectroscopy (project 2012-) OTKA project started Sept identify wet alteration products wet conditions  mineral alteration  spectral identification best candidates: phyllosilicates, hydrated sulphates models  past temperature, pH, salininty, water activity, rock/water ratio, duriation fluvial channel delta-like depositional structure weathered minerals phyllosilicates  moderate pH, high a w montmorillonite (Columbia Hills)  alkaline conditions kaloinite (many locations)  acidic sulphates  acidity  low water/rock ratio, short duration assemblages of hydrated minerals

Possible solution: IR spectroscopy (project 2012-) CRISM (Compact Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometer for Mars) onboard Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter multi- / hypespectral µm resolution: 20 m/px 544 wavelengths 200 m/px 72 wavelengths THEMIS (Thermal Emission Imaging System) onboard Mars Odyssey 9 bands: µm (thermal IR) 5 bands: µm (visible - near IR) resolution: global thermal IR bands 100 m 60% in visual bands 18 m influencing factors: aerosols (dust, vapor) surface dust cover particle size fluvial channel delta-like depositional structure weathered minerals

Possible solution: IR spectroscopy (project 2012-) mineral identification on Mars using library spectra own data: FTIR at Institute for Geological and Geochemical Research range: µm spectra of clays, sulphates with known H 2 O content eample: dehydrataion of zeolite 1.9 µm band disappears, also may shift Extrapolation not easy: phyllosilicates  moderate pH, high a w montmorillonite (Columbia Hills)  alkaline conditions kaloinite (many locations)  acidic assemblages of hydrated minerals

First targets clay-like smectites (phyllosilicate) characteristic vibrational absorption near 2.3 μm and a 1.9 μm band indicating molecular H2O, also at 1.4 μm not easy  mixed-interlayered, Fe-Mg substitution, diverse particle size… in lab we can „play” with these factors Mars laboratory Used data: FTIR spectrometer (lab): µm CRISM data (Mars): µm THEMIS data (Mars): µm

First location preliminary example: Nanedi Valles delta 2.1 nm absorption min.  monohydrated minerals elevated clay level? delta lake basin Kereszturi 2007 LPSC